Karolinska Scales of Personality, cognition and psychotic symptoms in patients with
schizophrenia and healthy controls
Engelsk titel: Karolinska Scales of Personality, cognition and psychotic symptoms in patients with
schizophrenia and healthy controls
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Författare:
Nilsson, Björn Mikael
;
Holm, Gunnar
;
Ekselius, Lisa
Email: bjorn.nilsson@neuro.uu.se
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 69
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 16033385
Sammanfattning
Background: Studies on both personality dimensions and cognition in schizophrenia are scarce.
The objective of the present study was to examine personality traits and the relation to cognitive
function and psychotic symptoms in a sample of patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls.
Method: In total 23 patients with schizophrenia and 14 controls were assessed with the Karolinska
Scales of Personality (KSP). A broad cognitive test programme was used, including the Wechsler
Adult Intelligence Scales, the Finger-Tapping Test, the Trail Making Test, the Verbal Fluency Test, the
Benton Visual Retention Test, the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning
Test . Results: Compared with controls, the patients exhibited prominent elevations on KSP scales
measuring anxiety proneness and neuroticism (P = 0.000005-0.0001), on the Detachment scale (P <
0.00009) and lower value on the Socialization scale (P < 0.0002). The patients also scored higher on
the Inhibition of Aggression, Suspicion, Guilt and Irritability scales (P = 0.002-0.03) while the
remaining five scales did not differ between patients and controls. KSP anxiety-related scales
correlated with the Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale (PANSS) general psychopathology
subscale. Cognitive test results were uniformly lower in the patient group and correlated with PANSS
negative symptoms subscale. There was no association between KSP scale scores and PANSS
positive or negative symptoms. Conclusion: The patients revealed a highly discriminative KSP test
profile with elevated scores in neuroticism- and psychoticism-related scales as compared to controls.
Results support previous findings utilizing other personality inventories in patients with
schizophrenia. Cognitive test performance correlated inversely with negative symptoms.